Shanghai Daily

Minhang introduces service guidance to support ‘children of the stars’

- Cui Songge, Liu Chengrong and Yang Yang

MINHANG District has released a standard service guidance on assisting autistic people, the first of its kind in Shanghai and nationwide.

Starting in 2017, the district began building a systematic support network for patients with autism. Its political consultati­ve conference proposed a draft of the guidance and its civil affairs bureau launched a thorough survey on the dilemmas and needs of people with autism.

The guidance was finalized later, as were a decision-making panel, policies, charity support and profession­al caring support.

Sixteen brick-and-mortar autismassi­sting centers in the district, including Huiyin Blue Castle and

Haoshang Blue House, were set up to serve people with autism.

In 2023 the district’s, as well as the city’s, first autism daycare center — Zhuanqiao Town Autistic Patients Assistance Branch — was launched to offer more help.

The district has formed an autism caring network that integrates district-level guidance and support centers, subdistric­t- and townshiple­vel support branches and consulting centers.

Minhang has included approachin­gadulthood people with autism into its employment assistance projects, offering labor evaluation­s, job training and support for people with medium and minor-degree autism.

It has also joined with special schools, agricultur­al cooperativ­es and libraries to offer labor experience such as vegetable and fruit picking and packaging, tailoring and cake making for teens with autism who are approachin­g adulthood.

Life-circle assistance

A life-circle support on autism — starting from raising public awareness of autism, early-stage screening and consultati­on, community rehabilita­tion and support, institute interventi­on and support, as well as employment assistance and internship­s — is benefiting more people with autism in Minhang.

A bubble tea store at Lane 66 Guangtong Road is staffed mostly by approachin­g-adulthood teens with autism.

The cups of bubble tea they have made are sent to delivery and sanitation workers.

The teens are able to feel recognitio­n from society while also receiving gratitude from the workers.

In 2023, the district political consultati­ve conference unveiled its first charity cafe — Evergreen Cafe — at its service center.

Few people, at their first glance, would even notice that the skilled baristas making coffee, foaming milk and creating latte art are a group of teens with autism.

The charity cafe, while offering internship­s or employment for the teens, also donates some of its income for a larger vision for employment of a larger group of people with autism.

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